The new exhibition at the Gilbert & George Centre in London dedicated to the cycle Death Hope Life Fear turns the spotlight back onto a decisive phase in Gilbert & George’s production, between 1984 and 1998. It revisits the years in which the duo shaped their visual vocabulary: saturated colours, panel-based compositions and the constant presence of their own bodies as both symbol and narrative device. The title, drawn from a key work, refers to the universal themes running through this group of pieces, from mortality to hope, approached not as abstract concepts but as everyday tensions filtered through irony, strict formal discipline and a theatricality that remains deliberately direct. The selection of 18 works offers a compact reading of that period, showing how their language had grown more monumental compared to their earlier experiments. In the images on display, the artists are no longer mere observers of the city but central, almost hieratic figures who occupy the scene with a deliberately imposing presence. The exhibition space itself, the artists’ own centre in the East End where they have lived since the late Sixties, reinforces this sense of self-representation and shapes an experience aligned with their idea of “art for all”. It is not a retrospective or a celebratory tribute, but an opportunity to revisit a crucial chapter in their story, a moment in which form tightened, colour became a language, and the duo’s visual identity took definitive shape. A concise yet revealing exhibition that allows viewers to observe up close the moment in which Gilbert & George defined themselves as icons of their own aesthetic universe.
The London exhibition devoted to Diane Arbus focuses on the intimate, domestic settings where the American photographer created some of her most compelling portraits. It reveals the power of a gaze that confronts the viewer without compromise, bringing to light the complexity of lives often overlooked.
The Courtauld Gallery in London reveals an unexpected side of Barbara Hepworth: the sculptor who painted emptiness. Hepworth in Colour intertwines form and pigment in a vivid story where colour does not decorate but breathes within the material.
The exhibition retraces the encounter between the Hawaiian Kingdom and Great Britain through journeys, symbols, and memories. Feather cloaks, sacred sculptures, and contemporary works come together to restore the voice of a people who crossed both the Pacific and history.
Last Days returns to the Linbury Theatre with an intensely intimate reinterpretation of the final days of an artist inspired by Kurt Cobain. Matt Copson and Oliver Leith avoid biographical narrative in favour of a study of silence, obsession and disorientation, turning the stage into a suspended psychological landscape.